All my thoughts are scrambled and will disappear if I don't record them.
Lately, there has been too much sadness. Too many people are dying. Some are people who I loved and some are people who I've never met but are the beloved of people I love. I want to decimate death. I don't want to be deprived of those who have enriched my life but this is selfish. I think of Rosemary who lived a great life but at 91 was wearing down. She did not want to continue. She'd get up every morning and think "damn it, I'm still here." My friend Mary wrote me: "Life is indeed precious. My mantra over the past couple of decades has been 'There’s Life and there’s Death. Everything in between is negotiable.'"
I believe that we have to make a conscious effort to be happy although there are those rare moments when it just drops into our laps. I really don't know how to explain this well so I googled happiness. "Regularly indulging in small pleasures, getting absorbed in challenging activities, setting and meeting goals, maintaining close social ties, and finding purpose beyond oneself all increase life satisfaction. It isn't happiness per se that promotes well-being, it’s the actual pursuit that’s key."
I like the idea of pursuit. I like the idea of indulging so I decided to take four days in Mallorca to escape the weight of sadness in this town but more so to have time with my youngest grandson who is so full of joy that it always bubbles over onto me. His mother and father are magnets too as they love to be on the move pursuing whatever gives them pleasure and most often their taste agrees with mine. And though I might groan and complain about the miles they make me walk to reach a gallery or restaurant, I am seldom disappointed.
If it looks like I had a good time, I did. Spanish tapas are the best and it is absolutely necessary to enjoy them with wine or beer - no complaining allowed. (Does it look like Jane and I are finding it difficult?)
I am so grateful for my family and the times we share and how the good times roll easily when we are together. I am also grateful for my friends who trust me with missions and suggest things that they would like to do but can't: I find myself going places that I wouldn't usually go and doing things that I wouldn't think of doing.
This happened when I mentioned to David Reid that I was going to Mallorca. "Would you take a branch of my bay tree and leave it on Robert Graves' grave?" he asked. "Would you read a poem?" he further requested. So I set off for the island with a sprig of David's bay tree at the bottom of my suitcase. Brendan and Jane thought it a fine idea to have a mission so we took off my last day on an old fashioned train to Soller. The town was pretty enough but being Sunday and off-season there was very little open. Brendan asked if I'd mind a half hour walk to a restaurant that served suckling pig. And so we trudged along narrow scary roads with too much traffic for more than half an hour, not knowing what we'd find at the end of the road. It was perfect - a gracious family restaurant that served good food and wine in pleasant surroundings. After we had sated ourselves and inhaled two bottles of wine, we caught a taxi to Deia and found the cemetery.
We then wandered into the town centre - so beautiful - and lo and behold, we found a terrace tavern where we took refuge as Seb was asleep and if we moved him out of his stroller, he would have woken. We sat and had more wine and beer - for the boy's sake really.
The finale to our perfect day was a taxi ride back to our apartment in Palma along the coastline with its breathtakingly beautiful scenery.
I left early the next morning to spend a day travelling, arriving home at 7 in the evening. The next day Rob was to have his second and hopefully final operation.
Although I hate hospitals, I am happy that we left at 6:30 a.m. to drive (or rather to be driven by two very kind friends) to the hospital in Toulouse. Rob was tense. I was scared. After a very long day, we arrived home at 8 p.m. without the biggest blob of Rob's cancer. He underwent an operation called HIFU performed by Professor Pascal Rischmann who has been doing the procedure since 2006. This is modern medicine at its finest. No chemotherapy or radiation. No ugly side affects and although Professor Rischmann spoke to the FDA in the States noting that the treatment is safe and effective, that it preserves erectile function in more than 90% of patients through nerve sparing, and that it is cost- effective, FDA officials maintained that the benefit of HIFU is unclear and that the risk is substantial. Curious.
So happiness may be a little elusive at the moment but I have experienced a number of highs in the last week and am happy that we are here, where quality of life appears more important than the almighty buck (Rob's operation would have cost around 30,000 in Canada or the US. Here it is free.) I am happy too that I can escape to exotic places on whim and meet up with the British contingent of our family. I am not so happy that two of my children live so far away but Gill and Derek are coming for Christmas and we will fly to Vancouver in January to be with Michael, Kenzie and Isaac.